The Free Press Journal

Revised travel ban takes effect in US

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The 'watered-down' revised version of President Donald Trump's fiercely litigated travel ban has finally gone into effect after months of winding through courts, the media reported.

The ban went into effect at 8 pm on Thursday.

Less than an hour before the ban was slated to begin, an emergency motion was filed in federal court by the state of Hawaii, which contests the Trump administra­tion's plan to exclude certain categories of foreign nationals that the state believes are allowed to enter the country under existing court rulings.

The White House on Wednesday set new guidelines for visa applicants from six Muslim-majority countries -- Libya, Syria, Iran, Somalia, Yemen and Sudan -and all refugees, requiring them to have a "close" family or business tie to the US.

A hotel reservatio­n, for example, will not constitute a bona fide relationsh­ip under the executive order, but an academic lecturer invited to speak in the US will be exempt from the travel ban.

Visa applicants will now have to prove a relationsh­ip with a parent, spouse, son, daughter, son-in-law, daughter-in-law or sibling in the US, a senior administra­tion official said.

If the applicant cannot sufficient­ly establish such a close relationsh­ip, he or she will be banned for 90 days if one is from the six Muslim-majority countries, and 120 days if one is a refugee from any country.

The new guidelines were issued in response to the Supreme Court's ruling partially restoring Trump's controvers­ial travel ban. The State Department criteria applies not only to visa applicants, but also to all refugees currently awaiting approval for admission to the US. -IANS

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